News story

Greater Manchester Police named specialist county lines force

The force will receive additional support and investment from the Home Office over the next three years to take down county lines drug networks.

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Greater Manchester Police (GMP) has been named as the fourth police force in the country to receive dedicated funding to take down county lines drug networks which are destroying lives and tearing apart communities.

The decision follows data analysis which indicates Manchester is consistently one of the top five areas in England and Wales for county lines drug activity, which is in turn linked to the flow of guns and knives into the area often used to commit violent crime.

The force will receive the additional support and investment from the Home Office over the next three years to pursue and lock up the ruthless criminals who often exploit young and vulnerable people for their own financial gain, taking them off the streets.

With this additional support, GMP will create a dedicated team to disrupt the highest harm and most profitable county lines. They will conduct investigations to identify the controllers of the phone lines used to push drugs such as heroin and crack cocaine to vulnerable people, and arrest and prosecute them, closing down that drug network for good. The new team will work alongside GMP’s existing Challenger programme to prevent the exploitation and serious violence committed by county lines gangs and safeguard vulnerable children and adults.

Their work will contribute towards the government’s new drug strategy target of eliminating more than 2,000 county lines over the next three years, backed by up to £145 million of investment to do more than ever to tackle the most violent and exploitative distribution model seen yet.

Police and Crime Minister, Kit Malthouse, visited GMP today (Wednesday 6 March) to see their work to tackle drug crime. He said:

The controllers of drug networks around Manchester are ruthless criminals motivated by nothing but greed.

They fuel violence and exploit children to do their dirty work, so they can stay undetected.

But we see them, and with this dedicated team, Greater Manchester Police will do more than ever before to stop them and spare the local community from their poison.

GMP now joins the Metropolitan Police Service, West Midlands Police and Merseyside Police which have all benefitted from extra funding due to their county lines importer force status since 2019.

Greater Manchester Police Chief Constable, Steve Watson QPM, said:

We are incredibly grateful to receive this additional funding, which will bolster our efforts to smash county lines activity and target those who prey on vulnerable children to commit their criminal deeds.

These shadowy networks are often very complex, and the people involved are prepared to bring violence and serious crime to the streets of Greater Manchester, so establishing a dedicated team will allow us to focus more attention on them than ever before and get those responsible firmly in our crosshairs.

Working alongside our partners within the existing Programme Challenger partnership, we’ll not only be disrupting and dismantling networks but also ensuring that the vulnerable people affected will get the best possible support available.

We know that county lines activity is high in our area, and I want to make it known to anyone who is committing these crimes in Greater Manchester that, quite simply, we will not tolerate it and our newly established team will do everything in their power to stop these criminals operating.

The government’s 10-year drug strategy, From Harm to Hope, will support people through treatment and recovery, as well as ensuring an even tougher response to criminal supply chains and the demand that fuels these illegal and violent markets.

This will be achieved by:

  • continuing to roll-up exploitative and violent county lines and strengthen our response across the drug supply chain, making the UK a significantly harder place for organised crime groups to operate
  • investing a further £780 million to continue to build drug treatment and recovery services, including for young people and offenders, with new commissioning standards to drive transparency and consistency
  • strengthening the evidence for how best to deter use of recreational drugs, ensuring adults change their behaviour or face tough consequences, and delivering universal and targeted activity to prevent young people starting to take drugs

Also today, measures in the Offensive Weapons Act come into force, including banning the sale of offensive weapons and corrosive substances to people under 18, making it an offence to possess a corrosive substance in a public place and banning the possession of offensive weapons and corrosives on further education premises.

To strengthen Greater Manchester’s wider efforts tackling serious violence and homicide, the government recently confirmed that GMP will receive a further £8 million funding in 2022 to 2023, to bolster their highly successful violence reduction unit operation and ‘hotspot policing’ initiatives.

Hotspot policing involves police forces operating regular, intensive, high-visibility police foot patrols for short periods of time within specific areas where data analysis shows there is a risk of serious violence.

Violence reduction units bring together local partners in policing, education, health, and local government, to identify vulnerable children and adults at risk, helping steer them away from a life of crime and violence. Together, this approach prevented 49,000 violent offences across England and Wales between 2019 and 2021.

Our Beating Crime Plan is delivering 20,000 more police officers to our streets and galvanising all parts of the public sector to collaborate on tackling serious violence.

Published 6 April 2022